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Journal ArticleDOI

Whiteness as Property

Cheryl I. Harris
- 01 Jun 1993 - 
- Vol. 106, Iss: 8, pp 1707-1791
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TLDR
In this article, the authors trace the origins of whiteness as property in the parallel systems of domination of Black and Native American peoples out of which were created racially contingent forms of property and property rights.
Abstract
Issues regarding race and racial identity as well as questions pertaining to property rights and ownership have been prominent in much public discourse in the United States. In this article, Professor Harris contributes to this discussion by positing that racial identity and property are deeply interrelated concepts. Professor Harris examines how whiteness, initially constructed as a form of racial identity, evolved into a form of property, historically and presently acknowledged and protected in American law. Professor Harris traces the origins of whiteness as property in the parallel systems of domination of Black and Native American peoples out of which were created racially contingent forms of property and property rights. Following the period of slavery and conquest, whiteness became the basis of racialized privilege - a type of status in which white racial identity provided the basis for allocating societal benefits both private and public in character. These arrangements were ratified and legitimated in law as a type of status property. Even as legal segregation was overturned, whiteness as property continued to serve as a barrier to effective change as the system of racial classification operated to protect entrenched power. Next, Professor Harris examines how the concept of whiteness as property persists in current perceptions of racial identity, in the law's misperception of group identity and in the Court's reasoning and decisions in the arena of affirmative action. Professor Harris concludes by arguing that distortions in affirmative action doctrine can only be addressed by confronting and exposing the property interest in whiteness and by acknowledging the distributive justification and function of affirmative action as central to that task.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Looking at The Heart of Whiteness in South Africa Today

Thomas Blaser
- 03 Jan 2008 - 
TL;DR: This paper studied life in contemporary South Africa and found that after long periods of colonial and apartheid rule and the relinquishing of political power by the “white majority,” whiteness had been lost.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occupational Race Segregation, Globalization, and White Advantage: White-Black Earnings Inequality in U.S. Metropolitan Areas

TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between occupational race segregation and white-black earnings inequality for men and women in 202 U.S. metropolitan statistical areas in the year 2000, and found that race segregation exacerbates white advantage for both male and female workers, supporting the tenets of the materialist conception of colorblind racism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Securing Our Nation's Roads and Borders or Re-circling the Wagons? Leslie Marmon Silko's Destabilization of "Borders"

TL;DR: In the United States, roads symbolize the freedom that Americans have come to value as discussed by the authors, and the right to travel is a basic constitutional freedom that cannot be restricted without due process.

Native American Students, Campus Racial Climate, and Resistance at Borderland University

Eddy A. Ruiz
TL;DR: Ruiz et al. as discussed by the authors conducted a two-year, critical ethnographic campus climate study, informed by critical social science, reinserted tribal peoples into the higher education discourse by including the sociohistorical forces, tribal sovereignty, and agency.
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